Brooks and Whitecourt battle for AJHL Supremacy

Whitecourt and Brooks clash in the AJHL finals for a first time
playoff matchup between the two. The Bandits have appeared in five of
the last six championships, while this is a franchise first for the
Wolverines. (Brooks Bandits/Twitter)

For one team, the Alberta Junior Hockey League (AJHL) Finals are
unfamiliar territory, but for the other, it’s a goal that has come to
fruition quite often in recent years.

The Whitecourt Wolverines are making their first appearance in the
AJHL finals, while the Brooks Bandits return to the championship for the
fifth time in six years. Both teams were sensational throughout the
year, with Brooks finishing first with an astounding 51-5-4 record,
while Whitecourt was third overall at 41-13-6.

Brooks took both games against the Wolverines in the regular season,
winning 5-2 in September and 4-1 in November. The teams have undergone
several changes since then, so it’ll be tough to read much into those.

The Bandits have played seven less games than the Wolverines this
postseason, which could be a huge factor in regards to fatigue and
player health. However, both teams had almost a week off ahead of the
finals.

Entering the finals, Whitecourt’s Justin Young and Joseph Nardi lead
the playoffs in scoring with 21 points in 16 games apiece. Young has 13
goals for four more than Brooks’ leading scorer Parker Foo, who is
averaging a goal per game with nine. Looking at points per game, the
Bandits have three of the top four, including Josh McKechney, who has an
astonishing 19 points in nine contests.

As for the goalie matchup, Brooks’ Mitchel Benson has turned aside
209 of 221 shots with a .946 save percentage, 1.31 GAA and three
shutouts. At the other end, Pierce Diamond is 11-5, sitting with a 2.13
GAA and .913 save percentage. He has faced around 170 more shots than
Benson in playoffs, although Benson saw about 110 more during the
regular season. Both have to be a little sore this late in the year.

The player to watch in the series is Brooks defenceman Cale Makar.
Makar, recently listed at #15 in the latest ISS Hockey rankings, could
even go in the top five in the NHL draft and has 12 points the playoffs.
He’s a quarterback on the powerplay and huge part of the Bandits.

Young needs to continue his remarkable season to give Whitecourt a
chance, and after a career-high 69 points during the season and
playoff-leading 13 goals, he’s lethal.

Based on experience, Whitecourt has a slight coaching advantage with
the winningest coach in AJHL history, Gord Thibodeau, sitting behind the
bench. Thibodeau won his only championship in 2006 with Fort McMurray
and is looking ring No. 2 in his historic career.

Not to be outdone, Brooks’ bench boss, Ryan Papaioannou, is the most
successful coach since he entered the league, picking up championships
in 2012, 2013 and 2016. He’s hoping for his second back-to-back crown.

SEMIFINALSAfter a less than stellar regular season matchup record against Fort
McMurray, including losing the top seed in the North in the final game
of the year, Whitecourt exacted their revenge.

They scored at least five goals in their four wins while taking the
series 4-2, showing what the offence is capable of. The Oil Barons won
Game 1 4-2, but Whitecourt won four of the next five including two on
the road. Fort McMurray managed more than just three goals in only one
game during the series.

In the last round, Brooks beat Okotoks 4-1 and in the first game of
the series, the Bandits soared to a 9-2 win. Okotoks rebounded with a
3-2 overtime win, but the Bandits then won 6-2, 3-0 and finally 3-2 in
overtime in Game 5 to take the series. They swept Olds in the previous
round and are 8-1 in the postseason.

Averaging 6.2 goals-for and just 1.3 against, the Bandits are the
series favourites, but Whitecourt is a resilient squad and were the
second highest scoring team during the regular season. Their best chance
at victory will be to outgun Brooks.

The AJHL Championship gets this weekend in Brooks, with Games 1 and 2
on Friday and Saturday, leaving little time for either team to reset in
between.

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